This presentation was made by Zohra Khan, at the 3rd Experts Meeting on Gender Budgeting held at the OECD Conference Centre, Paris, on 19-20 September 2019
1. Gender Budgeting and the
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG Indicator 5.c.1
Zohra Khan, Senior Policy Advisor,
Governance and National Planning
2. • Target 5.c calls on Member States to ‘Adopt and
strengthen sound policies and enforceable legislation for
the promotion of gender equality and the empowerment of
all women and girls at all levels’
• The indicator to measure progress against this target is
SDG Indicator 5.c.1 “Proportion of countries with systems
to track and make public allocations for gender equality
and women’s empowerment”
• The only indicator in the SDG monitoring framework that
links budgeting with implementation of legislation and
policies for gender equality and women’s empowerment
GRB in SDG FrameworkGRB in SDG Framework
3. • Fiscal process indicator - measures government
efforts that matter for development results
• Applicable to a broad range of country contexts
• Enables the tracking of progress over time
• Recognises progress made in different ways
• Highlights the importance of transparency
Why indicator matters for GRBWhy Indicator Matters
4. • UN Women, with the OECD and UNDP, spearheaded
methodological development
• Successful reclassification by IAEG-SDGs from Tier III
to Tier II
• Commenced rollout/monitoring with new methodology
in 2018 with Global Partnership for Effective
Development Cooperation
Methodology DevelopmentMethodology Development
5. • To assess if a country has a “system to track and make
public allocations for gender equality and women’s
empowerment,” questionnaire measures three criteria:
• Criterion 1: On programs and resource allocations for
gender equality and women’s empowerment.
• Criterion 2: On systems to track allocations for gender
equality and women’s empowerment.
• Criterion 3: On making allocations for gender equality
publicly available/transparency.
Data CollectionData Collection
6. Criterion 1
Which of the following aspects of public expenditure are reflected in
your government programs and its resource allocations? (In the last
completed fiscal year)
1.1 Are there policies and/or programs of the government designed to address
well-identified gender equality goals, including those where gender equality is
not the primary objective (such as public services, social protection and
infrastructure) but incorporate action to close gender gaps?
1.2 Do these policies and/or programs have adequate resources allocated within
the budget, sufficient to meet both their general objectives and their gender
equality goals?
1.3 Are there procedures in place to ensure that these resources are executed
according to the budget?
Criterion 1: Policies & Resources
7. Criterion 2
To what extent does your PFM system promote gender-related or gender-responsive
goals? (In the last completed fiscal year)
2.1 Does the Ministry of Finance/budget office issue call circulars, or other such directives, that
provide specific guidance on gender-responsive budget allocations?
2.2 Are key policies and programs, proposed for inclusion in the budget, subject to an ex ante
gender impact assessment?
2.3 Are sex-disaggregated statistics and data used across key policies and programs in a way
which can inform budget-related policy decisions?
2.4 Does the government provide, in the context of the budget, a clear statement of gender-
related objectives (e.g. gender budget statement or budget legislation)?
2.5 Are budgetary allocations subject to “tagging” including by functional classifiers, to identify
their linkage to gender-equality objectives?
2.6 Are key programs and policies subject to ex post gender impact assessment?
2.7 Is the budget as a whole subject to independent audit to assess the extent to which it
promotes gender-responsive policies?
Criterion 2: PFM System
8. Criterion 3
Are allocations for gender equality and women’s empowerment made
public? (In the last completed fiscal year)
3.1 Is the data on gender equality allocations published?
3.2 If published, has the information on gender equality allocations been made
public in an accessible manner on the Ministry of Finance (or office
responsible for budget) website and/or related official bulletins or public
notices?
3.3 If published, has the information on gender equality allocations been made
public in a timely manner?
Criterion 3: Transparency
9. Optional Questions
Optional Questions
Q1 Is there a requirement to apply a gender perspective in the context of setting budget-related
performance objectives (e.g. program-based or performance-related budgeting)?
Q2 Do subnational levels of government have systems to track allocations for gender equality?
Q3 Do subnational levels of government make the allocations for gender equality public?
Q4 Is a budget execution report provided, during the year or at year-end, showing the extent to
which allocations for gender equality have been applied in practice?
Q5 What is the level of resources both in absolute terms (national currency) and as a
percentage of total public expenditure, allocated to gender responsive policies and/or
programs in the last financial year?
A. In absolute terms (national currency)
B. As percentage of total public expenditure
Q6 Has the Ministry of Finance consulted with the Ministry of Gender Equality or relevant
government body on the necessary allocations for gender equality and women’s
empowerment?
Q7 Do women’s organizations and parliamentarians monitor local and national budget
allocations for gender equality and women’s empowerment?
Q8 Does tax policy include gender equality considerations in its design and implementation?
10. Data collection/validation
National Coordinator of GPEDC within country and OECD/UNDP-
JST
UN Women with OECD/UNDP-JST
Ministry of Finance/Budget Office/Primary GPEDC National
Government Focal Point
OECD/UNDP-JST
Submits
questionnaire
Submits answers to
questionnaire
Shares answers to questionnaire
UN Women HQ
UN Women Country Offices
Validation of data with
national partners
Analysis of data and
reporting
Monitoring and Validation
Shares updates/validation
with UNW HQ
11. • Based on the score from the questionnaire,
countries are classified as:
• Does not meet requirements
• Approaches requirements
• Fully meets requirements
• The method of computation of the indicator is as
follows:
𝑁𝑢𝑚𝑏𝑒𝑟 𝑜𝑓 𝑐𝑜𝑢𝑛𝑡𝑟𝑖𝑒𝑠 𝑡ℎ𝑎𝑡 𝑓𝑢𝑙𝑙𝑦 𝑚𝑒𝑒𝑡 𝑟𝑒𝑞𝑢𝑖𝑟𝑒𝑚𝑒𝑛𝑡𝑠 ∙ 100
𝑇𝑜𝑡𝑎𝑙 𝑛𝑢𝑚𝑏𝑒𝑟 𝑜𝑓 𝑐𝑜𝑢𝑛𝑡𝑟𝑖𝑒𝑠
Country ClassificationClassification & Computation
13. Aspects of PFM System
19%
28%
32%
34%
43%
52%
55%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
%ofcountries
Aspects of PFM System
14. • 19% of reporting countries fully meet indicator
requirements.
• 59% of reporting countries have some basic aspects of these
systems in place.
• Countries report more frequent use of sex-disaggregated
data to inform budget decisions and issuance of gender
budget directives.
• Measures to strengthen assessment of impact are
commonly absent – particularly gender audit.
2018 Data Analysis